Latest market news

US ethanol exports rise to record in 1H

  • Market: Agriculture, Biofuels
  • 06/08/24

US ethanol exports climbed to a record high in the first half of the year, driven by strong domestic production and foreign demand.

US ethanol exports averaged 125,600 b/d in January-June, up by a third from the same period last year and 2.2pc higher than the previous first-half record set in 2018, according to US Department of Agriculture (USDA) data going back to 2012.

Exports would set a full-year record if the pace is maintained through the end of 2024. US ethanol producers like Green Plains and ADM have said they are confident that robust exports will extend through the end of the year.

Robust domestic production has fed the rise in US exports, with output averaging 1.03mn b/d through June, the third highest rate through the first six months behind 2018 and 2019, according to EIA data dating to 2010. January-June output would also rank third on an annualized basis.

Low prices for corn, the main feedstock for US ethanol, have incentivized higher production by boosting margins. Front month CBOT corn futures this year have averaged 439¢/bushel, down by nearly a third from 2023, as prices near pre-2021 levels when they averaged less than $4/bushel for six consecutive years. Participants are expecting a record or near-record US corn yield this year, pressuring the domestic corn market.

Canada and the UK consistently combine for nearly half of US ethanol exports, with Asian markets emerging as key destinations for US ethanol. Asian markets combined for a 19pc share of US exports in the first half, compared with a 10pc share in the same period a year earlier.

US exports to Asia-Pacific in the first half more than doubled from the same period last year to around 24,000 b/d as countries in the region raise ethanol fuel blend rates. India is steadily increasing its fuel ethanol blends, with a goal of 20pc by 2025, helping nearly double first-half receipts of US ethanol to 13,100 b/d.

Exports to the UK have also nearly doubled to 16,300 b/d, as the country can take advantage of favorable trade economics into the rest of Europe in addition to meeting demand from its own fuel blending mandates.

US ethanol imports remain relatively small, averaging 183 b/d in the first half, up from 19 b/d in the same period last year. Nearly all undenatured ethanol imports for fuel use arrive from Brazil, with the country's sugarcane-based ethanol used as feedstock at LanzaJet's sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) plant in Georgia.

US ethanol exports may continue to rise in the coming months and years as the growing SAF market provides new demand pathways for ethanol.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
06/08/24

Harris selects Minnesota's Walz as running mate

Harris selects Minnesota's Walz as running mate

Washington, 6 August (Argus) — Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has picked Minnesota governor Tim Walz (D) as her running mate, elevating a Midwestern voice who has championed ambitious policies on climate change and clean energy during his two terms as governor. Walz, who was a schoolteacher before serving in the US Congress and then as governor, only recently emerged on the national stage as a favorite of progressives who could take on Republicans. Harris said she chose Walz as her running mate based partly on his "convictions on fighting for middle class families" and his efforts to deliver for "working families like his own." Harris will appear with Walz today at a rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the first event the campaign says will be a "five-day barnstorm" to introduce the Democratic ticket to voters in battleground states. The Harris campaign today touted Walz's service in the military and election in a conservative-leaning district as a sign of his broader political appeal. In 2021, Walz made Minnesota the first state in the Midwest to adopt California's tailpipe standards, and last year he signed a law requiring Minnesota utilities to switch entirely to wind, solar and other carbon-free electricity sources by 2040. Walz signed a separate law in June that would expedite the state's permitting process for renewable power projects. The campaign for Republican nominee Donald Trump today said Walz was a "West Coast wannabe" who as governor replicated California's policies on the environment. "From proposing his own carbon-free agenda, to suggesting stricter emission standards for gas-powered cars and embracing policies to allow convicted felons to vote, Walz is obsessed with spreading California's dangerously liberal agenda," Trump campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. Minnesota does not produce any crude or natural gas and has no coal mines. As of 2022, coal-fired power plants represented 27pc of Minneosta's in-state electricity generation, nuclear generated 24pc of electricity and renewable resources supplied 31pc of electricity. Minnesota is the fifth-largest ethanol producer in the US and has a production capacity of 1,400mn USG/yr. Environmentalists applauded Walz's selection as a running mate who has sought ambitious policies related to climate change and clean energy, in addition to signing a law last year providing $2bn for environment, climate and energy. The Harris-Walz ticket "isn't afraid to tackle climate change head-on," Sierra Club executive director Ben Jealous said. Harris' vice presidential selection meant passing over Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro (D), who was also being vetted as someone who could help Harris win the battleground state. Democrats hope the selection of Walz will offer a contrast to Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance, who Walz has criticized as "just weird" for positions such as faulting women for not having children. By Chris Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Delek idles three biodiesel plants


06/08/24
News
06/08/24

Delek idles three biodiesel plants

Houston, 6 August (Argus) — US independent refiner Delek is temporarily idling three biodiesel plants in Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi as it explores alternative uses for the sites. The refiner's Crossett, Arkansas, Cleburne, Texas, and New Albany, Mississippi, plants produce a combined 2,600 b/d of biodiesel from feedstocks such as cooking oil, fats, greases and vegetable oils such as soybean and canola oil. The company reported a $22mn impairment in its second quarter earnings released today as it temporarily idles the plants and explores "viable and sustainable alternatives". Delek did not disclose when the facilities were idled, but noted the decision was driven by a "decline in the overall biodiesel market". US biodiesel producers are facing worsening production economics , as evidenced by a deteriorating correlation between the soybean oil-heating oil (BOHO) spread and biomass-based diesel D4 renewable information number (RIN) credits. Although a relatively small amount of production, Delek idling its biodiesel plants follows several refiners pivoting away from prior investments in renewable fuels. Chevron said earlier this year it was closing indefinitely two biodiesel plants in Wisconsin and Iowa due to market conditions. US specialty refiner Vertex plans to pause renewable fuels production at its 88,000 b/d Mobile, Alabama, refinery by the end of the year, returning a converted hydrocracker predominantly making renewable diesel to produce what it says are wider-margin fossil fuel products. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Australian wheat exports fall in June, barley rises


06/08/24
News
06/08/24

Australian wheat exports fall in June, barley rises

Sydney, 6 August (Argus) — Australia's wheat exports fell in June because of lower demand in parts of southeast Asia and Yemen, but barley exports rose because of a rebound in Chinese demand. Wheat Wheat exports dropped by 21pc on the month to 1.26mn t in June from May, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). Shipments to Vietnam and Malaysia increased on the month, up by 77pc and 62pc respectively, offsetting lower demand from the Philippines and Korea. Volumes shipped to Indonesia fell by 160,000t to 55,000t,while volumes shipped to Yemen fell by 101,000t from May to 55,000t in June. Demand from China remained at low levels of 135,000t in June, mostly unchanged from May and from monthly levels during the October 2023-September 2024 marketing year. Average wheat export to China was approximately 450,000 t/month in October 2023- May 2024. China's current forward buying is limited compared with a year earlier, according to market participants. Barley Barley exports almost doubled on the month to 726,000t in June because Chinese demand rebounded by 277,000t to 530,000t. Vietnam booked its largest monthly barley shipment in the November 2023-October 2024 marketing year at 49,000t. Australia is on track to exceed the US Agricultural department's (USDA) current estimate of 6.9mn t for barley exports for the November 2023-October 2024 marketing year. Australia requires about 215,000 t/month in July-October to meet the USDA target, but the country has been exporting about 755,000 t/month over November 2023-June 2024. By Edward Dunlop Australian wheat and barley exports in June '000t Jun '24 May '24 Jun '23 Oct '23- Jun '24 Oct '22- Jun '23 Wheat Philippines 271.4 333.4 207.5 1,735.5 2,218.8 Korea 151.7 169.0 134.6 966.2 2,264.8 China 135.2 135.5 132.2 3,735.9 6,393.6 Vietnam 127.5 72.1 309.3 985.5 2,375.0 Malaysia 109.0 67.4 88.1 700.6 826.8 Total 1,260.5 1,592.0 2,559.1 16,105.7 25,440.5 Barley China 530.2 252.9 0.0 5,484.3 0.0 Japan 75.6 53.0 155.1 719.8 948.6 Vietnam 49.1 4.5 14.9 138.6 526.6 Mexico 33.0 0.0 33.0 191.4 289.7 Peru 17.0 18.0 0.0 95.8 51.9 Total 725.5 363.7 465.4 6,966.3 5,726.5 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics Note: barley marketing year is November - October but for simplicity this table is October-September to match wheat marketing year Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

France to produce 25.17mn t of wheat in 2024


05/08/24
News
05/08/24

France to produce 25.17mn t of wheat in 2024

Paris, 5 August (Argus) — Argus expects France to record its smallest wheat harvest in 41 years after near-continuous rain from planting right through until harvest proved detrimental to yields. Argus projects yields in France's 2024 wheat crop at 5.933 t/hectare (ha), down by 18.7pc on average yields in the past five years. Together with areas at 4.243mn ha, this would put this year's French wheat production at 25.17mn t. The figure is nearly 10mn t below last year's crop and represents a 27.2pc drop on the past five-year average. Argus collected feedback from farmers, grain trading firms and co-operatives across France during the week of 1-5 August. Market participants on the whole said their yields fell by 15-25pc compared with their previous averages. Only producers in the southernmost parts of France reported less of a drop. Wet weather set the season off to a poor start at the time of planting. And the outlook for French wheat then took a further hit from crop disease, low temperatures and a lack of sunlight hours. Unfavourable weather has also weighed on the quality of French wheat. Key measures of quality, in particular the test weight of the crop, vary highly from region to region this year. Grain processors will be able to assure there is wheat available to meet the standards of domestic and international buyers, despite a high volume of feed grade in this year's crop. But both French producers and exporters have already slowed sales activity at the start of the 2024-25 marketing year in response to signs of a poor crop. Argus ' output forecast puts this year's crop even smaller than in 2016, when France had its smallest harvest so far this century. In 2016, larger planted areas partially offset a drop in yields to 5.374 t/ha thanks to a generally favourable start of the season, before the weather turned less beneficial to wheat crops in spring. By Claudia Jackson French milling wheat production since 1970 French milling wheat production since 1970 Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

California CARB ULSD prices hit multi-year lows


05/08/24
News
05/08/24

California CARB ULSD prices hit multi-year lows

Houston, 5 August (Argus) — Outright California CARB diesel prices are at nearly 31-month lows following a narrowing in Los Angeles differentials and the underlying Nymex ultra-low sulphur diesel (ULSD) contract last week. Front-month outright prices in Los Angeles closed at $2.20/USG on 2 August, the lowest level since December 2021, after a 4pc downturn in the Nymex ULSD contract and a 2¢/USG weekly dip in differentials as August volume was heard traded lower. Overall ULSD liquidity remained muted in San Francisco, but Friday's Nymex loss pressured outright cash prices to $2.14/USG, also the lowest level since December 2021. California refiners had nearly doubled CARB diesel production in the week ended 26 July and averaged 193,000 b/d, according to latest data from the California Energy Commission (CEC) released on 1 August. The uptick fueled a 1.6pc increase in the state's total diesel inventory, to 2.9mn bl, despite a concurrent 38pc drop in output of other diesel fuels — a category including high-sulphr, non-California EPA and renewable diesel. By Jasmine Davis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more